Behind the Green Door j 403
403 403
- According to Ann- Mari Jönsson, the two Swedes returned to Uppsala with a “rich collec-
tion of dried plants, seeds and more than 200 sorts of herbs” from Siberia. - Jönsson, The reception of Linnæus’s works in Germany.
- Linnaeus considered divine justice to be an integral part of the “oeconomy of nature,” and,
starting in the early 1740s he collected historical, political, and personal anecdotes that demon-
strated either God’s compensation for good deeds or His harsh punishment for bad deeds. These
private notes in the form of maxims never meant for publication were intended solely as a moral
guide for his son, Carl Linnaeus the Younger. They were eventually published posthumously as
Nemesis Divina, and an English translation appeared in 1968. - Jönsson, The reception of Linnæus’s works in Germany.
- Shteir, A. B. (1996). Cultivating Women, Cultivating Science: Flora’s Daughters and Botany
in England, 1760– 1860. Johns Hopkins University Press. - George, S. (2007). Botany, Sexuality, and Women’s Writing (1760– 1830). Manchester
University Press. - Shteir, Cultivating Women, Cultivating Science.
- A cathedral close is a series of buildings associated with a cathedral, sometimes forming a
square surrounding a courtyard, or close. - Seward, A. (1804), Memoirs of the Life of Dr. Darwin.
- King- Hele, D. (1977) Doctor of Revolution: The Life and Genius of Erasmus Darwin. Faber;
George, S. (2005). “Not strictly proper for a female pen”: Eighteenth- century poetry and the
sexuality of botany.” Comparative Critical Studies 2:191– 210. - George, Botany, Sexuality, and Women’s Writing.
- What appears to be a red perianth is actually a collection of highly modified petaloid sta-
mens. Only one of the petaloid stamens is fertile, and it faces a single petaloid style, which pos-
sesses two stigmas, one at the apex and one on the side just below the apex. Before the flower bud
opens, the anther transfers pollen to the laterally located stigma, a process known as “secondary
pollen presentation.” The stamen then dies. Although there are two stigmas, pollen can grow to
form a pollen tube only on the apical stigma. The lateral stigma functions solely to present pollen
to visiting bees. - Darwin explains his gothic account of Gloriosa in a footnote: “The petals of this beauti-
ful flower with three of the stamens, which are first mature, stand up in apparent disorder; and
the pistil bends at nearly right angle to insert its stigma amongst them. In a few days, as these
decline, the other three stamens bend over and approach the pistil.” - Browne, J. (1989), Botany for gentlemen: Erasmus Darwin and “The Loves of the Plants.”
Isis 80:592– 621. - Schiebinger, L. (1993), The private lives of plants, in L. Schiebinger, ed., Nature’s
Body: Gender in the Making of Modern Science. Beacon Press; Browne, Botany for gentlemen. - Desfontaines (1787), Observations sur l’irritabilité des organs sexuels d’un grand nom-
bre de plants. Mémoires de l’Académie des Sciences, 473. Cited by Delaporte, F. (1982), Nature’s
Second Kingdom. MIT Press. - Cooke, B. (1749), The mixture of the farina of apple- trees,— of the mayze or Indian Corn.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 46:205– 207. - Darwin, E. (1803), Temple of Nature, 2, pp. 263– 270. J. Johnson.
46. Ibid.